The Writer’s Center welcomes writer and long time instructor, GG Renee Hill for a reading from her new publication, Story Work: Field Notes on Self-Discovery and Reclaiming Your Narrative.
FREE & open to the public. RSVP below.
GG Renee Hill is an author whose books have helped thousands of people overcome the emotional obstacles keeping them from living fully expressed lives. GG’s recent releases include two guided journals published through Rockridge Press, Self-Care Check-In: A Guided Journal to Build Healthy Habits and Devote Time to You and A Year of Self-Reflection: 365 Days of Guided Prompts to Slow Down, Tune In, and Grow. GG is a creative coach and founder of the Inner Story Writing Circle, a membership community for writers and creatives seeking guidance, support, and tools for the heart-centered work of writing about their lives.
About the Book
A guide to understanding the stories we tell ourselves and the actions needed to reclaim power over our narrative.
We absorb the world around us through stories. It’s how we make sense of our surroundings, our communities, and ourselves. There’s often truth and validity in these stories. But the stories we tell ourselves are not an end-all, be-all. Instead, they’re all part of a larger, ongoing, unfinished narrative–one that we must continually refresh, expand, and contemplate to stay soft and open-hearted.
Here’s the thing: we can choose to keep these stories open to possibility and imagination–or we can choose to keep them closed. That’s where Story Work comes in. Through essays and prompting questions, GG Renee Hill invites readers to breathe new life into the stories we carry. She leads by example, by penning the raw material of her own life: an upbringing raised by a mother with schizophrenia, and a lifetime of internal and external forces trying to minimize that impact. It was a long, old, heavy story Hill silently carried with her–the powerless girl who lost her voice in the wreckage of her mother’s condition — until she turned to writing and began to change the meaning she’d assigned to her experiences. And she doesn’t stop there. Hill invites readers to the transformative practice of creative self-discovery through storytelling — treating our life experiences as creative material that we have the power to shape. For the person searching, Story Work is the answer that enables us to live with an open-hearted curiosity–one that both fuels and grounds us.
If you need an accommodation for this event, please contact us at access@writer.org. We will attempt to fulfill all requests, but advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility services.
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